Silver prices are steady near historic highs in thin Christmas Day trading, with spot quotes hovering just under the $72-per-ounce mark as markets digest a record-setting week.
At 10:20 a.m. Eastern Time (15:20 UTC) on Thursday, Dec. 25, 2025, Kitco’s live silver quote showed a bid near $71.85 and an ask near $71.97 per ounce, with the day’s range listed at roughly $70.20 to $72.75. [1]
Other widely followed spot trackers were showing silver around the same zone earlier in the morning. JM Bullion’s live spot page listed $72.15 per ounce at 10:08 a.m. ET, highlighting just how tight today’s price action is despite headline-making volatility earlier in the week. [2]
Why silver is consolidating today
The big story on Dec. 25 isn’t a fresh breakout—it’s the pause after the surge.
Reuters reported that silver hit a fresh all-time high at $72.70 in the latest session before the holiday and was last quoted around $71.94, extending what has become one of the strongest annual runs in modern precious-metals trading. The same report puts silver up about 149% year-to-date, underlining just how powerful 2025’s rally has been. [3]
That “take a breather” tone matters because holiday markets can distort price signals. With major venues closed or running limited hours, liquidity is thinner, spreads can widen, and moves can look sharper than they would on a fully staffed trading day—a backdrop that often produces consolidation even when the bigger trend remains intact.
Today’s headline drivers: rates, the dollar, and geopolitics
Even in a quiet session, the macro narrative that powered silver higher hasn’t disappeared:
1) Rate-cut expectations remain supportive.
Reuters notes that the U.S. central bank cut rates three times in 2025 and that traders are pricing in two rate cuts next year, a setup that tends to benefit non-yielding assets like precious metals when real yields are perceived to be capped. [4]
2) Fresh political signals are feeding the “lower rates” storyline.
Reuters also reported comments from U.S. President Donald Trump about wanting the next Federal Reserve chair to lower interest rates if markets are doing well—language traders can interpret as reinforcing the market’s dovish bias. [5]
3) Geopolitical tension remains a tailwind.
The same Reuters report highlighted developments involving a Venezuela-linked oil tanker being pursued by the U.S. Coast Guard—one of several geopolitical threads that can keep safe-haven demand elevated even when profit-taking appears. [6]
In short: the conditions that helped silver rip higher into year-end haven’t vanished—markets are simply pausing after a vertical move.
Silver price forecast and analysis for Dec. 25: key levels traders are watching
A wave of Christmas Day technical analysis published on Dec. 25 converges on the same idea: silver’s trend remains bullish, but the market is cooling from overbought conditions.
FXEmpire: bullish structure intact, “buy-the-dip” bias above support
FXEmpire’s Dec. 25 technical outlook describes silver holding around $71.85 in an ascending channel. The analysis flags $70.20 as a key support zone, with an upside focus near $73.80 if bullish momentum rebuilds after the holiday lull. [7]
What to take from that: FXEmpire is effectively saying the trend is still up—as long as the market defends the breakout area near $70—but the next leg higher may need liquidity to return.
FXLeaders: RSI cooled from extremes, support bands in focus
FXLeaders’ Dec. 25 note frames today’s action as a pause below $72 after a sharp momentum burst, pointing to consolidation inside an upward channel. The commentary highlights nearby supports around $70.75 and $69.55, while acknowledging the market recently looked stretched on momentum gauges. [8]
This lines up with what many traders watch after a parabolic move: does silver hold above the first “dip-buying” zone, or does it slip into a deeper mean reversion?
Traders Union: strong trend, but overbought risk still matters
Traders Union’s Dec. 25 update similarly notes silver trading near $71.8 after briefly pushing above $72, describing a rally that has stayed resilient even as momentum indicators became extended. [9]
While Traders Union is more trading-oriented than institutional, it echoes a common post-rally warning: when silver runs hard, it can correct hard—especially around holidays when liquidity is patchy.
Reuters / Kitco view: $75 as the next big psychological target
One of the most-cited near-term calls circulating today comes from Kitco Metals’ Jim Wyckoff in Reuters coverage.
Wyckoff said the precious-metals market is seeing chart consolidation and mild profit-taking after record highs—and added a clear technical road map: a next upside target of $75 per ounce for silver by the end of the year, with technicals still bullish. [10]
Whether or not silver reaches $75 by year-end, the key point is positioning: analysts are treating today’s pause as consolidation, not a confirmed trend reversal.
What’s happening “under the hood”: why silver has been so explosive in 2025
To understand why silver can print new highs and then churn sideways, it helps to remember what kind of market silver is: smaller, thinner, and more momentum-sensitive than gold—but with a hybrid identity as both precious metal and industrial input.
Reuters earlier this month described a “perfect storm” behind silver’s run, citing strong investment demand, momentum buying, ongoing supply deficits, and industrial demand tied to sectors such as solar and electric vehicles, along with the macro tailwinds that also support gold. [11]
That combination—macro + fundamentals + positioning—is why silver often overshoots, then consolidates, then moves again.
Silver price today: why quotes differ depending on the source
If you’re seeing slightly different numbers across platforms this morning, you’re not alone—and it’s normal.
- Kitco’s live page at 10:20 a.m. ET showed $71.85 bid / $71.97 ask. [12]
- JM Bullion showed $72.15 at 10:08 a.m. ET. [13]
- Reuters cited $71.94 as the “last” price in its market report, after noting the $72.70 record. [14]
Differences typically come down to bid vs. ask vs. last trade, data vendor feeds, and timing—and those gaps can widen on a holiday.
Regional angle: India’s silver market signals
In India, where retail bullion interest can be especially important during periods of strong price action, local-market commentary is also focusing on technical levels and trend continuation.
A Times of India technical view published Dec. 25 pointed to key levels for MCX Silver, framing the market as structurally strong but level-dependent in the near term. [15]
For global readers, that matters because India is a major precious-metals demand center—when price momentum accelerates, regional flows and sentiment often follow.
What to watch next when markets fully reopen
With the Christmas holiday thinning out participation, many analysts are looking beyond today’s tape to the next catalysts:
- Liquidity returning after the holiday (often when trend-following funds re-engage). [16]
- Macro data risk: FXEmpire noted attention shifting to upcoming Japanese releases (including Tokyo core CPI and other activity indicators), which can influence global risk sentiment and FX—both relevant for dollar-priced metals. [17]
- The rate path narrative: markets are still anchored to the idea of additional easing in 2026, a backdrop Reuters says continues to shape precious metals. [18]
Bottom line for silver price today at 10:20
As of 10:20 a.m. ET on Dec. 25, 2025, silver is consolidating near $72 per ounce after a record high near $72.70, with the market’s attention split between holiday-thinned trading conditions and a still-bullish macro/fundamental narrative. [19]
The day’s most consistent takeaway across Reuters and the major technical outlets publishing today: silver’s trend remains constructive above key supports near $70, but after such a historic run, the metal may need time (and liquidity) before attempting its next breakout. [20]
Note: Spot prices can move quickly and may vary by provider; this article reflects quotes available around 10:20 a.m. ET on Dec. 25, 2025.
References
1. www.kitco.com, 2. www.jmbullion.com, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.fxempire.com, 8. www.fxleaders.com, 9. tradersunion.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.kitco.com, 13. www.jmbullion.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. timesofindia.indiatimes.com, 16. www.fxempire.com, 17. www.fxempire.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.kitco.com, 20. www.fxempire.com


